WORLD / AMERICAS
Ex-Mexican top official to face trial
Judge accepts charges over 43 missing students in 2014
Published: Aug 25, 2022 09:10 PM
A Mexican judge on Wednesday ordered a former attorney general to stand trial in the case of 43 students whose murky disappearance in 2014 traumatized the nation.

Jesus Murillo Karam will be tried on charges of forced disappearance, torture and obstruction of justice, the Federal Judiciary Council said after a court hearing in Mexico City.

He is considered the architect of the so-called historical truth version of events - presented in 2015 by the government of then president Enrique Pena Nieto - that was widely rejected, including by relatives.

So far the remains of just three of the students from the Ayotzinapa teachers' college in the southern state of Guerrero have been identified.

Murillo Karam, a former heavyweight of the once dominant Institutional Revolutionary Party, is the most senior figure charged so far in connection with the case, which triggered international condemnation.

He was arrested on August 19 at his home in an exclusive neighborhood of Mexico City and remanded in custody, with the judge ruling he will remain in pre-trial custody.

The judge also ordered a second, 3-month complementary investigation into the case. 

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said on Wednesday that anybody involved in a coverup must be held to account, including the person who "gave the order."

Arrest warrants were also issued last week for more than 80 other suspects, including military personnel, police officers and cartel members, prosecutors announced.

The students had commandeered buses to travel to a demonstration in Mexico City before they went missing.

Investigators say they were detained by corrupt police and handed over to the Guerreros Unidos drug cartel, which mistook them for members of a ­rival gang, but exactly what happened to them is disputed.

According to the official report presented in 2015, cartel members killed the students and incinerated their remains at a garbage dump.

Lopez Obrador said in March that navy members were under investigation for allegedly tampering with evidence, including at the dump.

A truth commission investigating the atrocity has branded the case a "state crime" involving agents of various institutions.

It said that military personnel bore "clear responsibility," either directly or through negligence, contrary to the "historical truth," which did not attribute any responsibility to members of the armed forces.